If it should develop that Kev Hin-shaw is innocent of the murder of his wife—and testimony seems to be piling up in that direction—it wili be a long time before the people of this community will again see an ae-cused person sentenced to prison for life on purely circumstantial evi* dence. Rcv.Rinsbaw may be guilty, but if he is, there has been few con* victed men so persistent in declaring their innocence. He has never lost an opportunity to brand his incarcer* ation as an awful mistake, and the belief that the truth some day he known has led him to make demands upon his friends that seemed exacts ing and useless. It was never posi* tively proved that Hinshaw murdered his wife, and those who believe him guilty must accept the theory of a desperately planned and fiendish wife-murder not in keeping with the man as he was known and accepted in the community in which he lived and was reared.—Indianapolis Sun.